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Handball Sport Verein Hamburg
German handball club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Handball Sport Verein Hamburg is a professional handball club from Germany, located in Hamburg. Currently, Handball Hamburg competes in the Handball-Bundesliga. The full name in German is Handball Sport Verein Hamburg e.V. but the club has traditionally been called HSV Handball, HSV Hamburg or simply HSV. Their main rivals are THW Kiel and SG Flensburg-Handewitt.
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History
Handball Sport Verein Hamburg is a merger of the former handball clubs VfL Bad Schwartau and HSV Lübeck, which joined forces in 1999. In 2002, they were moved to Hamburg for growth and renamed. Although locally known as HSV Hamburg, the club is not part of the Hamburger Sportverein and does not have the right to use their logo and abbreviation for promotional purposes. The club notably won a EHF Champions League in 2013 and a Handball-Bundesliga in 2011. On 20 January 2016, their license was revoked due to irregularities and, as a result, Handball Hamburg was not authorized to participate in either the first or second handball Bundesliga in the 2016/17 season.[1] As a result, the club was relaunched with a new coat of arms, colors and a new image, from HSV Hamburg to Handball Sport Verein Hamburg; although the official name remained unchanged. The club returned to the Handball-Bundesliga in the 2021–22 season.[citation needed]
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Crest, colours, supporters
Naming history
Club crest
- Logo used between 1999 and 2016
- Official logo since 2016
Kits
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Accomplishments
- Handball-Bundesliga:
Gold: 2011
- 2. Handball-Bundesliga:
Gold: 2021
- DHB-Pokal:
Gold: 2006, 2010
- DHB-Supercup:
Gold: 2004, 2006, 2009, 2010
- EHF Champions League:
Gold: 2013
- EHF Cup Winner's Cup:
Gold: 2007
Team
Current squad
- Squad for the 2024–25 season[2]
Technical staff
- Head coach:
Torsten Jansen
- Assistant coach:
Blaženko Lacković
- Athletic Trainer:
Philipp Winterhoff
- Physiotherapist:
Christina Dressel
- Club doctor:
Dr. Daniel Briem
Transfers
- Transfers for the 2025–26 season
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Previous squads
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EHF ranking
- As of 31 March 2022[3]
Former club members
Notable former players
Johannes Bitter (2007–2016, 2021–)
Matthias Flohr (2004–2016)
Heiko Grimm (2008–2009)
Chrischa Hannawald (2009)
Pascal Hens (2003–2016)
Torsten Jansen (2003–2015, 2016–2017)
Thomas Knorr (2002–2007)
Michael Kraus (2010–2013)
Jürgen Müller (2007–2008)
Arne Niemeyer (2008–2009)
Adrian Pfahl (2013–2015)
Jens Schöngarth (2019–2020)
Kevin Schmidt (2014–2016)
Stefan Schröder (2005–2019)
Manuel Späth (2021–2022)
Nicolai Theilinger (2021–)
Jens Vortmann (2015–2016, 2021–)
Adrian Wagner (1996–2003)
Henning Wiechers (2005–2007)
Enid Tahirović (2012)
Andrej Kurchev (2002–2003)
Andrej Siniak (2002–2005)
Bruno Souza (2006–2008)
Ilija Brozović (2015–2016)
Davor Dominiković (2013–2015)
Domagoj Duvnjak (2009–2014)
Blaženko Lacković (2008–2014, 2017–2020)
Igor Vori (2009–2013)
Alois Mráz (2005–2006)
Morten Bjerre (2003–2004)
Marcus Cleverly (2013–2014)
Allan Damgaard (2015–2016)
Hans Lindberg (2007–2016)
Casper Ulrich Mortensen (2015–2016, 2021–)
Henrik Toft Hansen (2013–2015)
Dener Jaanimaa (2015–2016)
Bertrand Gille (2002–2012)
Guillaume Gille (2002–2012)
Kentin Mahé (2013–2015)
Aron Rafn Eðvarðsson (2018–2020)
Yoon Kyung-shin (2006–2008)
Žarko Marković (2013–2014)
Tormod Moldestad (1999–2003)
Simen Muffetangen (1999–2003)
Piotr Grabarczyk (2015–2016)
Michał Jurecki (2007–2008)
Krzysztof Lijewski (2005–2011)
Marcin Lijewski (2008–2013)
Maciej Majdziński (2015–2016)
Alexandru Șimicu (2014–2015)
Igor Lavrov (2005–2007)
Dmitri Torgovanov (2007–2009)
Azat Valiullin (2021–)
Roman Pungartnik (2005–2007)
Renato Vugrinec (2011–2012)
Jon Belaustegui (2003–2005)
Joan Cañellas (2013–2014)
Petar Đorđić (2013–2015)
Zoran Đorđić (2012)
Branko Kokir (2005–2006)
Draško Nenadić (2015–2017)
Goran Stojanović (2002–2007)
Stefan Terzić (2012–2013)
Iwan Ursic (2006–2008)
Dan Beutler (2011–2013)
Oscar Carlén (2011–2013)
Jonas Ernelind (2002–2004)
Nicklas Grundsten (2008–2009)
Andreas Nilsson (2012–2014)
Fredrik Petersen (2012–2013)
Johan Petersson (2015)
Per Sandström (2006–2011)
Tomas Svensson (2002–2005)
Oleg Velyky (2008–2010)
Former coaches
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References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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